Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Meet Surena 2, a human-sized, human-shaped (ish) robot that's new on the world robotics scene. He's capable of walking, and designed to perform the similar sort of human-assist role as other similar bots. He's from Iran. What?Surena 2 was unveiled recently in front of none other than President of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He's 1.45 meters tall, weighs in at 45 kilos and, according to the state news network, is "designed and developed to be used in sensitive and difficult jobs on behalf of a person or as help." Or at least the Gulf News notes that "such robots" as this are designed like that. Which doesn't necessarily mean Surena 2 is.This vagueness comes from the extremely tight-lipped news coverage about Surena 2 inside Iran itself. He's apparently capable of "Walking slowly like human beings" and "regular arm and leg movements are among its characteristics" which tells us that at least the 'bot is able to walk--though we don't know if he's got actual natural gait, with free-falling footplacements like Asimo, or if he performs a simpler balanced one-foot-permanently-grounded walk (we're guessing the latter, given the word "slowly.") The overall design sure does look like Asimo, though.Peering at the images, it would seem that Surena 2 has at least 20 degrees of freedom, with servos allowing for forward and lateral motion at most joints, and probably a twisting head move. The robot's hands don't seem extremely dextrous, but can probably make a gripping move, and we have no idea if it's capable of speech, speech recognition or even if it self-navigates using machine vision and clever processing (or alternatively if he's nothing more than a clever remote control toy.)Why are we so skeptical? Because the robot's immediate predecessor is Sorena 1, and the 2008 video of him in action should tell you all you need to know:http://www.fastcompany.com/1667251/i...nce-technology